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Joseph F. Boulos, Compact ChairCBRE/The Boulos Companies
Mary Black AndrewsState Representative
Wendy L. AultMELMAC Education Foundation
Richard E. BarnesUniversity of Southern Maine
Mary R. CathcartState Senator
Glenn A. CummingsState Representative
Caroline DonnellyMaine Community Foundation
Deborah L. DrewUniversity of Southern Maine
Jill C. DusonCity of Portland
Mark FasoldL. L. Bean, Inc.
Sandra FeathermanUniversity of New England
John FitzsimmonsMaine Community College System
Joseph R. FoleyUnumProvident
Bonnie L. FortiniAdult Basic Education Collaborative,Machias
Susan A. GendronDepartment of Education
Greg GollihurFinance Authority of Maine
Kevin M. HealeySisters of Charity Health Systems
Michael HigginsThe Spurwink Institute
Judy HoranWLBZ-2
Sue HusemanMELMAC Education Foundation
Ronald P. MillikenUniversity of Maine at Farmington
Susan E. PercyCreative Work Systems
Lawrence R. PughColby College Board of Trustees
Colleen J. QuintMitchell Institute
John RohmanWBRC Architects / Engineers
Evelyn S. SilverUniversity of Maine
Kathryn G. UnderwoodKeyBank, N.A.
Carol WestonState Senator
Joseph W. WestphalUniversity of Maine System
Ex Officio
Henry BourgeoisMaine Development Foundation
Henry L. P. SchmelzerMaine Community Foundation
We, the Members of the Maine Compact for Higher Education, assert that a college education is a RIGHT and RESPONSIBILITY for all Maine people.
GreaterEXPECTATIONS
College as a Right and Responsibility for all Maine People
Prepared by John O. Harney, Executive Editor, Connection: The Journal of the New England Board of Higher Education
May 2004
Dear Friends:
Completing a college degree is a fundamentalright and responsibility of all Maine people.
Sound radical?
So did the idea of a right to elementary or high school at one time – beforethose credentials became minimum requirements for American freedom andprosperity.
Today, Maine residents face a world in which knowledge is multiplying at anunfathomable rate. This knowledge revolution is transforming the workplace. Ifthe recent past is a guide, many of tomorrow’s jobs are beyond our imaginationstoday. (Ten years ago, who would have envisioned a life as a Web Developer?)
Meanwhile, the decent manufacturing jobs once available to a Maine workerwith a high school diploma and a good work ethic are disappearing.
A college degree is fast becoming the new minimum credential in the Maineworkplace. In a similar vein, a college-educated workforce is now the minimumrequirement for our state’s economic and civic well-being.
With this changing environment as a backdrop, thirty-one extraordinarily dedicated Maine leaders have devoted their time and energy to develop anambitious Action Plan aimed at significantly increasing Maine’s supply of college-educated people.
This report is the first result of the hard work, diligent research and productivecollaboration of the Maine Compact for Higher Education.
Joseph F. BoulosChair
1
MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
About the Maine Compact for Higher Education
The Maine Compact for Higher Education is a joint effort of the MaineDevelopment Foundation and the Maine Community Foundationcommitted to raising educational attainment in Maine.
The Compact is made up of education, government, communityand business leaders and others who care about Maine’s future. TheCompact’s ambitious goal is to make Maine residents among the best-educated in America by 2019. That means nothing less thanchanging Maine’s educational culture.
The Compact is committed to finding ways to expand higher educationopportunities in Maine over the long haul. As Maine’s champion forhigher education, the Maine Compact for Higher Education will:
• Partner with existing Maine business, government, education and community organizations to implement forward-looking strategies to raise educational attainment among Maine studentsand adult learners;
• Evaluate the results of these initiatives through an annual report on progress;
• Launch and manage a multi-year campaign to change the values,expectations and behaviors of Maine citizens regarding highereducation;
• Promote innovation and best practices in expanding educationalattainment; and
• Provide a consistent and unified voice that promotes higher education, and asks leaders locally and statewide to take responsibilityfor achieving the goal of increased educational attainment.
2
ABOUT THE MAINE COMPACT
Initial funding for the Compact has been provided by the GreatMaine Schools Project at the Mitchell Institute, Libra Foundation,Maine Community Foundation, Maine Educational Loan Authority,MELMAC Education Foundation, Peoples Heritage Bank a Divisionof Banknorth, N.A., and UnumProvident.
Fifty years ago, about one-half of the jobs inMaine were in the manufacturing sector. A Maineresident with a high school diploma could earn adecent living at a paper mill or a textile factory.Good on-the-job training was often available. No college was needed. But those jobs have all but disappeared.
The new jobs of the Knowledge Economy—officejobs, education and health care jobs and technologyjobs—require problem-solving and interpersonalskills. What manufacturing jobs remain will likely bein “high-performance” workplaces where the latesttechnology takes care of rote, manual tasks, andfrontline workers are responsible for making criticaldecisions on the shop floor. These jobs increasinglyrequire college degrees.
Yet six of every 10 Maine ninth-graders will veer off the road to college—and off the road to theAmerican Dream. With every child who fails to earn a college degree, another bit of Maine’s economicfuture is lost. And that’s not all. People who graduatefrom college not only get better jobs, earn moremoney and pay more taxes than those with highschool diplomas. They’re also more likely to vote,more likely to do volunteer work, more likely to serveon civic boards, and better prepared to understandthe increasingly complex fiscal, educational and environmental questions facing local communitiesfrom Jackman to York.
For a half century, America has viewed completinghigh school as the minimum education accomplish-ment. Today, Maine faces the opportunity—and theimperative—to raise this bar. Maine’s future requiresthat we make college attainment as ubiquitous ashigh school attainment is today. The Compact’sAction Plan includes five strategies to begin movingMaine toward that goal:
1. Create Maine’s Promise ScholarshipProgram to ensure that no Maine student is denied a college educationfor financial reasons.
The Maine’s Promise Scholarship Program willeliminate all unmet need and all student loans forstudents from low-income households who goto college in Maine. Under this initiative, eligible students will still receive any available form of public and private merit-based and need-basedfinancial aid (including tuition waivers, grants, scholarships and Federal Work-Study). The Maine’sPromise Scholarship Program will fully cover anyeducational costs that remain after accounting for these other sources of student aid. And the scholarship program will be available to fill this“gap” for four consecutive years as long as studentscontinue to meet the eligibility requirements.
2. Create the Maine Early CollegeInitiative to encourage students to continue their education beyond high school.
The Maine Early College Initiative will enable everyMaine high school to develop a program offeringstudents a spectrum of early college experiences.These early college experiences may range fromAdvanced Placement (AP) classes to single courses at a local community college or university to opportunities to graduate from high school with significant college credit—in some cases, a full yearof credit or even an associate degree.
3
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
3. Introduce the Maine CollegeTransition Initiative to help adults earn degrees.
The Maine College Transition Initiative will establish high-quality, cost-effective and accessiblepathways to postsecondary education for adults.The initiative is designed to ensure that adults whoare committed to earning a college degree, buthave not completed high school or are academicallyunderprepared for college work, get the supportthey need to earn high school diplomas and succeed in college. The Maine College TransitionInitiative will help adults who are studying to earnhigh school diplomas to transition to college. It willprovide preparatory support to adults who have ahigh school diploma but are not academically prepared to take college courses. And it will providecounseling, mentoring and support services toenable these adults to successfully transition to college and earn degrees.
4. Establish the College for MEEmployer Initiative to help employerssupport the education of their workforce.
The College for ME Employer Initiative will provide Maine’s public and private employers with technical assistance, training and statewide recognition for forward-looking workforce education policies. The Compact will also advocatea simple state tax credit that reimburses employersfor 50% of what they pay to help employees pursue college degree programs. The College for ME Employer Initiative will provide Maine employers with information, training and technicalassistance delivered regionally and on site. Thistechnical assistance could include help conductingaudits of existing practices, setting five-year goals,increasing employee participation in tuition assistance programs and connecting increased educational attainment to workplace advancement.
5. Launch a comprehensive College for ME Campaign to change publicperceptions of higher education andbehaviors toward going to college.
The College for ME Campaign will use variousmedia and partnerships to raise awareness ofcollege opportunities, to change prevailing attitudesabout the value of college education and ultimatelyto increase the number of Maine people earningcollege degrees. College for ME messages willreach across Maine through television, radio, newspaper and the Internet. College for ME will be visible in schools, communities and businessesthroughout the state. In time, College for ME willcreate a shared vision of college as the Right andResponsibility of all Maine residents.
4
Six of every 10 Maine ninth-graders will veer off the road to college—and off the roadto the American Dream. With every child whofails to earn a college degree, another bit ofMaine’s economic future is lost.
5
The Maine Compact for Higher Education wishesto thank the many individuals and organizationswho contributed to this Action Plan.
Special thanks to Compact members KevinHealey, Michael Higgins and Sue Huseman, whoserved as committee chairpersons. We alsothank the many individuals who have worked onthis project, including Leanne Greeley Bondwho coordinated the strategy committees,Dianne Heino who coordinated logistics,Meredith Jones who advised on the programand facilitated meetings, and Lisa Plimpton whoserved as a researcher and production editor ofthe Action Plan. Thanks to Catherine Reilly, A.Mavourneen Thompson and Philip Trostel fortheir valuable research support. And, thanks toDavid Swardlick and his team at SwardlickMarketing Group.
In addition to Compact members, many otherindividuals served on special committees whosework informed this report. We thank JamesBreece, Yellow Light Breen, Tom Broussard,
William Cassidy, Tae Chong, Rebecca Dyer,Shirley Erickson, Robert Haley, Joyce Hedlund,Nancy Hensel, Durward Huffman, SteveMcFarland, John Monaghan, Cathy Newell,Sheila Pendse, Gregory Powell, Rosa Redonnett,Cullen Ryan, Candace Ward, Joe Wood and RobWood. The Compact also thanks Patrick Phillipsand Robert Woodbury for reviewing and makingcontributions to the Action Plan.
Special thanks to the leaders and staff of theMaine institutions that generously providedtheir facilities for Compact meetings. Theyinclude Bates College, Bowdoin College, CentralMaine Community College, Central MainePower Company, Colby College, the HigherEducation Center in Houlton, the University ofMaine and the University of Southern Maine.
Finally, we express our gratitude to HenryBourgeois of the Maine Development Foundationand Hank Schmelzer of Maine CommunityFoundation whose vision and leadership haveguided the Compact’s work from its inception.
Acknowledgments
Message from the Chair 1
About the Maine Compact 2
Executive Summary 3
The Case for College 7Maine’s ChallengeBenefits of Higher EducationA Paradigm Shift: College as Right and ResponsibilityBuilding a New Road to Higher EducationAn Action Plan
Action Strategies 151. Maine’s Promise Scholarship Program2. Maine Early College Initiative3. Maine College Transition Initiative4. College for ME Employer Initiative5. College for ME Campaign
Additional Considerations 25PreparationRetention and CompletionAffordability
Appendix A Budgets 27
Appendix B About the Data 29
6
TABLE OF CONTENTS
This document is available on the web at www.CollegeforME.com and may be reproduced in its entirety without prior permission of the Maine Compact for HigherEducation. Excerpts or references to material herein should include proper credit to theMaine Compact for Higher Education. The views and opinions expressed in this documentdo not necessarily reflect those of the Maine Development Foundation or the MaineCommunity Foundation.
As you read this document, please note that citations and explanations of the data usedare presented in Appendix B.
Maine’s ChallengeToday’s “Knowledge Economy” rewards peoplewho have college degrees and punishes those whodo not. Since the early 1970s, people with collegeeducations have lived in a world of expandingopportunities and growing incomes. Many peoplewithout college educations have faced dead-endjobs and stagnant incomes.
The road to the American Dream now runs directlythrough college—there’s no way around it. Yet forMaine residents, that road is strewn with obstacles.
Consider the fate of the 19,000-plus young peoplewho were ninth-graders in Maine’s public and private schools in 2002.
If these 19,000 young people are like their recentpredecessors, a little over 15,000 will graduatewith their high school class. At this very first turn,almost 4,000 will swerve off the road, failing toearn even a high school diploma—the minimumeducational requirement in the old economy.
Fortunately, about 3,000 more will earn highschool diplomas or GEDs later. But of the 18,000total who eventually earn diplomas or GEDs, justover 10,000 will enroll in college before the age of40. At this critical junction, almost 9,000 of thoseoriginal ninth-graders will have been bumped offthe road, scared off by high college prices or justnot interested in college in the first place.
Finally, among those 10,000 who do go to collegeeither directly from high school or later in life,many will be sidetracked by financial difficulties orconflicts with work or family, and wind up leavingcollege before earning a degree. Just over 7,200will earn any college degree before age 40. Fewerthan 5,000 will earn a bachelor’s degree.
The statistics are grim. Six of every 10 Maineninth-graders will veer off the road to college—and off the road to the American Dream.
Many Maine high school graduates who begin college leave Maine to do it. The concern is thatthose Maine residents who do earn a degree outside Maine may never return. In the year 2000,3,296 Maine freshmen—43% of the total—leftMaine to begin their higher education. (In contrast,only 2,351 freshmen from outside Maine cameinto the state for college.)
Unfortunately, these trends have been playing outamong Maine’s young people for a long time. Yearupon year of lagging educational attainment hasleft Maine with an undereducated adult population.
7
THE CASE FOR COLLEGE
9th graders (2002) 19,243
graduate high school in 4 years 15,050
complete high school later 3,010
go directly to college 7,977
go to college by the age of 40 2,390
earn postsecondary degrees 7,221
earn four-year degrees 4,982
Source: Philip Trostel, Margaret Chase Smith Center for PublicPolicy, University of Maine. See Appendix B for more explanation.
Projected Educational Attainmentof Today’s Maine 9th Graders
Just 25% of Maine adults, ages 25 to 64, holdbachelor’s degrees, compared with 35% of all New Englanders. And in some rural Mainecounties, only 15% of working-age adults hold the four-year degrees.
Many adults have completed some college coursesbut have not earned degrees. About 112,000Maine working-age adults fall into this categorytoday. This figure is expected to rise to 118,000 by 2014.
A population that is undereducated is also underprepared for today’s knowledge-intensive, technology-intensive workplaces and communities.
Benefits of Higher Education
Benefits to IndividualsThe more you learn, the more you earn. Americanswith high school diplomas earn an average ofabout $29,000 annually, according to the latestnational data. Those with bachelor’s degrees earnan average of about $47,000. Over the course ofthe average work life, a person with a bachelor’sdegree will earn a whopping $800,000 more thana person with a high school diploma only. Andwith each level of education—master’s degrees,doctorates, professional degrees—this earnings“premium” rises higher.
Raising levels of education not only benefits individuals. It is a must for Maine’s economic future.
8
UNEMPLOYMENTRATE IN 2001
MEDIAN EARNINGSIN 2001
$22,350
$29,187
$34,340
$36,399
$46,969
$56,589
$82,421
$75,182
7.3%
4.2%
3.5%
2.9%
2.5%
2.1%
1.2%
1.1%
LESS THAN HIGH SCHOOL
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE
SOME COLLEGE - NO DEGREE
ASSOCIATE DEGREE
BACHELOR'S DEGREE
MASTER'S DEGREE
PROFESSIONAL DEGREES
DOCTORATE
Earnings and UnemploymentRate by Education Level
Source: Postsecondary Education Opportunity, www.postsecondary.org
Benefits to Maine’s EconomyFifty years ago, about one-half of the jobs in Mainewere in the manufacturing sector. A Maine residentwith a high school diploma could earn a decent living at a paper mill or a textile factory. Good on-the-job training was often available. No college wasneeded. But those jobs have all but disappeared.
The new jobs of the Knowledge Economy—officejobs, education and health care jobs and technologyjobs—require lots of problem-solving and interpersonal skills.
What manufacturing jobs remain will likely be in“high-performance” workplaces where the latesttechnology takes care of rote, manual tasks, andfrontline workers are responsible for making critical decisions at the point of production and service delivery. These jobs increasingly require college degrees.
No wonder employers point to the supply of educated workers as among the top reasons theychoose to locate or expand in a given area.
If Maine residents don’t have the credentialsdemanded by the new high-performance workplace,employers will simply go elsewhere in search of educated workers. They already are. As the nationallyrespected higher education analyst Thomas G.Mortenson has noted: “Economic welfare and theprosperity of individuals, families, cities and states[has been] redistributed according to educationalattainment.”
Increased levels of educational attainment areimportant to Maine for other reasons as well.
The more people learn, the more they earn. And themore they earn, the more they contribute to societyin the form of taxes. For each additional bachelor’sdegree in Maine, we can expect at least $2,100 innew state and local tax revenues per year—and asmuch as $100,000 over a 45-year work life.
This report lays out the goal of generating 39,500additional bachelor’s and associate degree holders inMaine by 2019. That will generate up to $60 millionin additional annual tax revenues for Maine—to saynothing of the money all Maine taxpayers will save asa result of reduced demands on corrections, Medicaid,unemployment insurance and social services.
With every child who fails to earn a college degree,another bit of Maine’s economic future is lost. Andthat’s not all. People who graduate from college notonly get better jobs, earn more money and pay moretaxes than those with high school diplomas. They’realso more likely to vote, more likely to do volunteerwork, more likely to serve on civic boards, and betterprepared to understand the increasingly complex fiscal, educational and environmental questions facinglocal communities from Madawaska to Kittery.
Educational attainment promises many other benefitsfor both individuals and society. College-educatedpeople tend to be healthier than their less-educatedcounterparts and are more likely to have healthinsurance. They are less likely to run into troublewith the law, less likely to experience poverty. Theirchildren tend to do better in school.
9
THE CASE FOR COLLEGE
Governor John Baldacci’s economic plan is built ona simple premise: the most important measure ofeconomic development in Maine is the educationalattainment of its people and the opportunities thatarise from Maine people’s participation in the economy of tomorrow.
The more you learn…• The more you earn• The more you contribute to society in taxes• The healthier you are• The better your children do in school• The more likely you are to vote• The more you volunteer and serve on civic boards• The more you patronize the arts
A Paradigm Shift: College as Right and ResponsibilityFor a half century, America has viewed completinghigh school as the minimum education accomplish-ment. Today, Maine faces the opportunity—and theimperative—to raise this bar. College attainmentmust become as ubiquitous as high school attainment is today.
To achieve that goal, Maine should do somethingthat no other state has yet done. Maine should boldlydeclare: A college education is a RIGHT andRESPONSIBILITY for all Maine people.
WE ASSERT THAT:• All Maine people must have the RIGHT to adequate
preparation for college in their local schools.Likewise, they have a RESPONSIBILITY to work hardto meet college admissions requirements.
• All Maine people must have the RIGHT to a college education that is affordable. At the sametime, they have a RESPONSIBILITY to explore theirfinancial and academic options carefully and toinvest in their own education to the extent thatthey are able.
• All Maine people must have the RIGHT to the support they need to stay on the road to college,whether they are youngsters or adults. And theyhave a RESPONSIBILITY to stay focused on earninga degree.
The people of Maine also have a collective RESPONSIBILITY—to invest adequately and consis-tently in the physical and intellectual infrastructurefor teaching and learning in Maine’s local schools,colleges and universities and adult education centers and to nurture a culture that supports higher education.
This is an ambitious goal. But Maine is extraordinarilygood at making change when its residents and itsleaders set their minds to it. Consider the recenttransformation of Maine’s K-12 education. In 1993,
the Maine Coalition for Excellence in Education envisioned and began promoting a statewide systemto raise the quality of Maine’s elementary and secondary schools. Four years later, Maine imple-mented a set of rigorous K-12 standards known asLearning Results that helped propel Maine’s elemen-tary and secondary schools from among the worst-performing in the United States to among the best.Today, Maine students consistently rank among thetop 10 nationally in science and reading.
We succeeded in these efforts because every singleMaine community dedicated itself to the goal ofhigh education standards. In many ways, Maine really is one large community. If we dedicate ourselves to increasing college attainment, we’ll succeed at that too.
Building a New Road to HigherEducationThe Maine Compact for Higher Education is not aThink Tank. It’s a Do Tank. The Compact is committedto the goal of making Maine people among thebest-educated in America. Here’s how we will measure our progress.
Today, 37% of Maine’s working-age people have an associate, bachelor’s or graduate degree. Thecomparable share for New England is 45%. Withoutany special intervention, the proportion of Maineresidents holding degrees is projected to grow by0.83 percentage points annually to 51% by 2019.This would mean the number of degree holders inMaine would grow from 259,860 today to 379,380by 2019. But to match the New England share,which is projected to grow to 56%, Maine willrequire a total of 418,880 degree holders by 2019.This is roughly 39,500 more degree holders than the projected growth rate would produce.
This is a major undertaking. The Compact’s strategiesare a plan for achieving 39,500 degree holdersabove projections. But, we cannot assume that wewill easily achieve even the projected growth rate.
10
Only an annual accounting of results will keepeveryone focused on maintaining our projectedgrowth and adding new degree holders.
To complicate matters, slow birth rates and little in-migration will shrink the number of new Mainepublic and private high school graduates from over15,000 in 2003 to a projected 12,500 by 2014. So in order to realize an increase in college attain-ment, we must increase the percentage of Mainehigh school graduates who enroll in college directlyfrom high school from today’s 52% to 75% in
2014. That will raise the number of Maine highschool graduates enrolling in college from 7,700 in2000-01, the latest year for which good data areavailable, to a little more than 9,400 in 2014.
At the same time, we must increase the rate atwhich students graduate from Maine colleges anduniversities. In 2000-01, about 20% of full-timeundergraduates earned associate or bachelor’sdegrees. We need to increase the percentage to23% by 2014. This will result in an additional1,031 college degrees awarded annually.
11
THE CASE FOR COLLEGE
Degree holders as a share of all adults 37% 45%
MAINE
Adults (ages 25-64) who have an associate, bachelor’s or graduate degree
NEW ENGLAND
Current number of degree holders 259,860
Average annual growth rate, 1992-2002 0.83 0.67(in percentage points)
Projected share in 2019, assuming growth rateof the past decade continues 51% 56%
Additional number of degree holders neededby 2019 for Maine to match projected NewEngland average of 56% 39,500
Total number of degree holders in Maine, 2019 418,880COMPACT GOALS:
Projected number in 2019, assuming growth rateof the past decade continues 379,380
CALCULATING THE COMPACT’S GOAL
Source: Philip Trostel, Margaret Chase Smith Center for Public Policy, University of Maine. See Appendix B for more explanation.
We also need to increase college enrollment andcompletion among Maine’s working-age adults.Approximately 112,000 of Maine’s working-ageadults already have some college experience. Weaim to help at least 11,000 of them complete college degrees over the next decade.
To be sure, increasing educational attainmentamong Maine residents will not by itself ensureeconomic competitiveness for Maine.
For example, we also need to forge policies andpractices that will give college-educated Maine residents—and college grads from elsewhere—strong reasons to work and live in Maine. We needto help those educated people create new Mainejobs, new Maine companies and maybe even newMaine industries.
Reaching these goals will cost Maine money. Thegood news is that raising educational attainmentalso pays hard cash for states. The more peoplelearn, the more they earn. The more they earn, the more they pay back in the form of taxes andthe less they draw on public resources.
12
How Maine will create 39,500additional degree holders by 2019
Increase the proportion of Mainehigh school students who enrollin college
Increase the degree completionrate among the students at Mainecolleges and universities
Increase the number of Maine'sworking adults with some collegeexperience who enroll in andcomplete degree programs
An Action PlanThe Compact began its work by asking: In whichareas could improvements be made that wouldlead to real gains in educational attainment?
Three major areas emerged.
The first is preparation. Many Maine students lackexposure to the culture of going to college. Theyrequire rigorous high school courses and schooland community support to become academicallyand financially prepared for college. And theyneed secure pathways between high school andcollege to avoid getting lost in the transition.
The second is affordability. Nationally, collegetuition has outpaced growth in family incomes and student aid in recent years. New strategies areneeded to help traditional-age college studentsand adults, particularly those with low incomes,pay for college.
The third area is retention. For adult learnersespecially, there are multitudes of reasons, fromwork pressures to family responsibilities, to veer offthe road to a college degree. Innovative strategiesare needed to help them persist.
After identifying these broad challenges, theCompact formed three corresponding committeesto explore issues related to each. Committeemembers consulted regional and national expertsto explore how other states and regions haveaddressed similar problems. They identified “bestpractices,” and then carefully examined how thesemodels might be applied to the unique challengesfacing Maine. After research and deliberation, thecommittees crafted recommendations to addressMaine’s educational attainment challenges.
The full Compact then narrowed its focus toaddress three key areas of opportunity: encouragingall Maine high school students to prepare for andsucceed in college, helping Maine adults withoutcollege degrees to earn them, and changing theeducational values held by Maine people. TheCompact crafted five high-impact action strategiesto help shift the paradigm from higher educationfor a privileged few to College for ME.
Two of the Compact’s action strategies aim to help high school graduates enroll and succeed in college. These are:• Increase financial aid to improve access to and
persistence in college for low-income students.• Provide early college experiences at all Maine
high schools.
Two of the action strategies aim to encourage andsupport adult students. These are:• Establish pathways to postsecondary education
so that more adults can earn college degrees.• Encourage and support Maine employers to
develop and strengthen employee educationprograms.
A fifth strategy aims to change the expectationsand behaviors of Maine citizens regarding theimportance of a college education.• Launch a comprehensive College for ME
campaign to change the expectations andbehavior of Maine people regarding college education.
Budgets for the five Action Strategies are presented in
Appendix A. Summaries of other ideas developed by
Compact committees appear in the section of this report
titled Additional Considerations.
13
THE CASE FOR COLLEGE
The Maine’s Promise
Scholarship Program will
eliminate all unmet need
and all student loans for
students from low-income
households who go to
college in Maine.
15
The Goal: Provide eligible low-income Maine students with access to affordable higher education byensuring that the full cost of attendingcollege in Maine is covered by financialaid sources, other than student loans,for four consecutive years.
The Challenge: A chief reason thatMaine students do not go to college is money. Maine and its New Englandneighbors are home to the mostexpensive public and private collegesand universities in the United States.From 1994 though 2001, averagein-state tuition and fees at Maine’s public colleges and universities were50% higher than the U.S. average.
Meanwhile, nearly 12 percent ofMaine’s population—and over a quarter of all public schoolchildren inMaine—live in poverty.
A postsecondary education is impera-tive to break the cycle of poverty andelevate future incomes and quality oflife. Although some scholarship programs are currently available tolow-income students, nearly half of theavailable funds are loans. Furthermore,not all scholarship programs pay thefull costs of attending college, leaving a sizable amount of unmet need.
The combination of unmet need andreluctance to incur educational debtknocks many students off the road toearning degrees. Some are discouragedfrom even considering college. Othersbegin the journey but do not obtaindegrees.
The Strategy: The Maine’s PromiseScholarship Program will eliminate allunmet need and all student loans forstudents from low-income householdswho go to college in Maine. Under this initiative, eligible students will stillreceive any available forms of publicand private merit-based and need-based financial aid (including tuitionwaivers, grants, scholarships andFederal Work-Study). The Maine’sPromise Scholarship Program willfully cover any educational costs(tuition, fees, room and board,allowances for books, supplies andtransportation, and personal and miscellaneous expenses)1 that remainafter accounting for these other sourcesof student aid. And the scholarship program will be available to fill this“gap” for four consecutive years aslong as students continue to meet the eligibility requirements.
These students will not be burdenedwith any educational debt. They wouldpay the Expected Family Contribution(EFC) determined by the U.S.Department of Education. But becausethis contribution is calculated based onfamily income, students with very lowincomes will have either zero EFC or a nominal amount.
ACTION STRATEGIES
Create Maine’s Promise Scholarship Program to ensure that noMaine student is denied a college education for financial reasons.1
1 The cost of attendance used by each institution to determine eligibility for need-based financial aid.
To be eligible for Maine’s Promise ScholarshipProgram, a student must:
• Be a Maine resident.• Have a reported family income at or below
200% of the established poverty level.• Meet campus admissions requirements.• Enroll in a public or private higher education
institution in Maine.• Be enrolled continuously in a degree program.• Attend on a full-time basis.• File a Free Application for Federal Student Aid
(FAFSA) by March 1.• Maintain a GPA of at least 2.0 on a 4.0 scale.
The Maine’s Promise Scholarship Program willalso feature a student services system to help eligible students learn about the program and useit. This system will include a toll-free telephonenumber, linking students to specially trained staff oncampuses who can assist them with financial aidissues and dedicated academic advisors to help withtransition and retention issues.
The very availability of Maine’s PromiseScholarship Program will entice more eligible students who are not currently attending a post-secondary institution to attend. It will enable morecurrently eligible students who are in school to stayin school and graduate. And it will encourage moreineligible students to become eligible by filing theirFAFSAs on time, for example, or keeping up anappropriate GPA.
These intended outcomes are beneficial and desirable. They are also very difficult to estimate.The table at right provides an estimate of statewidestudent participation in the scholarship program.
The number of students impacted by this scholarship program represents more than 15% oftotal college enrollment (FTE) in Maine. But theseestimates are conservative. A modest growth rate of 33% in attracting new students was used for theprojections. This growth rate could easily double, as discussed in Appendix B.
Even assuming a conservative 33% growth rate, this program is expected to generate 630 additionalnew college and university graduates each year.Over a 10-year period, this would result in 6,300new degree holders living and working in Maine.
More importantly, this program could break thecycle of poverty for 6,300 Maine residents. A college education will transform their lives. Andtheir children’s lives. And their grandchildren’s lives.
Related Strategies: For this initiative to work, Mainemust also invest consistently and adequately in its publiccolleges and universities. Educating people is a labor-inten-sive, technology-intensive endeavor. And it’s expensive. Theless a state appropriates in tax funds for higher education,the more its campuses must charge students and their families in the form of tuition and fees. From 1996 though2000, Maine taxpayers invested 21% less per capita inpublic higher education and state grant programs than thenational average. Ever-rising college prices discouragelower- and middle-income families from pursuing collegewhile applying upward pressure on student aid spending.
16
Currently Enrolled Students: University of Maine System 2,414Maine Community College System 2,151Maine private colleges* 913
Subtotal: 5,478
Anticipated New Students:University of Maine System 797Maine Community College System 710Maine private colleges* 310
Subtotal: 1,817
Total:University of Maine System 3,211Maine Community College System 2,861Maine private colleges* 1,223
TOTAL: 7,295
Estimated Annual Student Participation inMaine’s Promise Scholarship Program
Source: James Breece, University of Maine System and Durward Huffman, Maine Community College System.*Estimate based on distribution of the Maine State Grant Program.
The Compact proposes a
Maine Early College
Initiative in which every
Maine high school
develops a program
offering students a
spectrum of early college
experiences.
The Goal: Ensure that every Mainehigh school offers an early collegeprogram to its students, allowing asmany Maine students as possible toexperience academic success at thecollegiate level before graduatingfrom high school—regardless oftheir academic records or post-secondary education plans. Currently,roughly 18% of Maine students docollege-level work while still in highschool. We will boost that numberto 70% in the next 10 years.
The Challenge: Too many Mainestudents see college as beyond theirreach. This is especially true ofyoung people who are the first intheir family to consider postsecondaryeducation. Not only are these students unfamiliar with the wholeculture of preparing for college (taking SATs, filling out college applications and financial aid forms,identifying sources of aid, visitingcampuses and so on), they often do not have an academic foundationin high school that will ensure asmooth and successful transition to college.
Students who leave high school withsome meaningful exposure to collegeare less likely to see higher educationas abstract and unattainable. Withmost so-called early college initiatives,however, the focus has been on students who are headed to highereducation anyway. This approachmisses the critical opportunity to
leverage change by increasingopportunities to access college-levelwork for students who are not planning to go on to college.
The Strategy: The Compact proposes a Maine Early CollegeInitiative in which every Maine highschool develops a program offeringstudents a spectrum of early collegeexperiences. Several promising earlycollege models currently exist. This strategy seeks to expand those models and, ultimately, support theiravailability statewide.
Early college programs developed by Maine high schools will providemultiple points of entry to meet theneeds of a wide variety of students.Importantly, students whose parentsdid not go to college and those who are not actively considering college for themselves will haveopportunities to take at least onecollege-level course for credit whilein high school.
These early college experiencesrange from a single course or seminaroffered at a local community collegeor university to opportunities tograduate from high school with significant college credit—in somecases, a full year of credit or even an associate degree. Offerings ofAdvanced Placement (AP) courses to high school students will be dramatically expanded, withinschools as well as online and
17
ACTION STRATEGIES
Create the Maine Early College Initiative to encouragestudents to continue their education beyond high school.2
18
through distance learning. Additionally, a broaderrange of students will be encouraged to enroll inAP courses, and schools will provide support tohelp students take on more challenging work.
Most importantly, the Maine Early CollegeInitiative gives students who are not planning togo to college the opportunity to experience, first-hand, the academic rigor of college in a campussetting and to begin seeing themselves as successfulcollege students.
The intended result is that every student graduateshigh school with a level of literacy that allows themto choose to attend college or not.
The Maine Early College Initiative is designed tocreate more entry points to college-level learning,and to provide the support necessary to ensure student success when they take on that challenge.We anticipate that this initiative will not only significantly boost the rate of Maine students whogo to college, but will also improve the chances ofsuccess among those students who do go to college.
The Partners: Maine colleges and universities(public and private; two-year and four-year) willbroaden and deepen their outreach to area highschools and high school students. This means moving beyond the traditional relationship centered on recruiting students to a philosophicaland operational commitment to support collaborative early college programs. Maine highschools will work closely with their college partnersto create programs that will serve a wide array of students. As we seek to strengthen Maine’s education system on a Pre-K to 16 basis, guidancecounselors play a critical role in supporting studentswho do not see college in their future.
The Maine Department of Education will work withthe Mitchell Institute to address various policyimplications of these new programs, supporting
necessary action by the state Board of Educationand the Maine Legislature. And the MitchellInstitute will take the lead in shaping and supportingthe early college programs as they are developed,while also undertaking the study and research of the impact of these programs on the studentsthey serve.
Related Strategies: The Maine Early CollegeInitiative should be viewed as part of an imperative to strengthen Maine’s high schools and to ensure thatevery Maine student graduates prepared for success incollege. This requires that structures and practices arein place to meet these goals, including continued support and expansion of Maine’s Learning Results and strong school guidance and counseling services.
Other efforts are needed to create what educators call “seamless transitions” between high school andcollege. Strategies include aligning courses and curriculaso that every student who graduates from high schoolhas taken all the courses expected of her as an entering college freshman, and coordinating highschool exit exams and college entrance exams so thathigh school and college standards and expectationsmesh. Other potential strategies include using personallearning plans to create long-term goals and having allhigh school seniors apply for college and financial aid.
Possible Elements of an Early College Program• Student enrollment in individual courses at local
postsecondary institutions (community college,private college, university)
• Formal arrangement with local postsecondaryinstitutions, including campus-based mentoringand support for participating students
• Opportunities for high school students to earncollege credits toward a degree
• Significant expansion of AP—both course offerings and enrollment eligibility
19
The Goal: Help 7,000 to 10,000additional Maine adults earn collegedegrees over the next decade.
The Challenge: Adult educationprograms are natural stepping-stonesto higher education. But many adultstudents hold full-time jobs or carefor children while they pursue education, so it’s very easy for themto lose their footing before earningcollege degrees. Just as Maine’s highschool students need meaningfulearly college experiences to stay on the road to college, more than125,000 Maine adults in variousadult education programs needeffective college transition programsto turn their continuing educationcourses, skills upgrading or GED programs into more rewarding college degree programs.
The Strategy: The Maine CollegeTransition Initiative will establishhigh-quality, cost-effective and accessible pathways to postsecondaryeducation for adults. The initiative isdesigned to ensure that adults whoare committed to earning a collegedegree, but have not completedhigh school or are academicallyunderprepared for college work, get the support they need to earnhigh school diplomas and succeed in college.
The Maine College TransitionInitiative will help adults who are studying to earn high schooldiplomas to transition to college.
The initiative will provide preparatory support to adults who have a high school diploma but are not academically prepared to take college courses. And it will provide counseling, mentoring and supportservices to enable these adults tosuccessfully transition to college and earn degrees.
Many programs allow participants totake free preparatory courses beforeentering college. That way, once thestudents transition to college, theycan direct their energy—and theirfinancial aid—to courses that givethem credit toward a degree.
The Partners: The Maine CollegeTransition Initiative will be a partnership of Maine’s 126 AdultEducation Programs, represented by the Maine Adult EducationAssociation, along with the MaineCommunity College System, theUniversity of Maine System and theMaine Department of Education.Other collaborators will includeMaine’s private colleges, and thestate Departments of Labor andHuman Services.
Maine’s Adult Education Programswill provide adults with GED/highschool completion and preparatorysupport as they transition to college.The Maine Community CollegeSystem and the University of MaineSystem will provide accessible pathways to postsecondary educationfor adults who are academically
ACTION STRATEGIES
The Maine College
Transition Initiative will
establish high-quality,
cost-effective and
accessible pathways to
postsecondary education
for adults.
Introduce the Maine College Transition Initiative to helpadults earn degrees.3
qualified. The Maine Department of Education willprovide technical assistance and oversight, andwork with communities to finance the MaineCollege Transition Initiative.
Partners will execute a memorandum of under-standing, built upon the existing agreementbetween Maine’s Adult Education Association andthe Maine Community College System. An advisorycommittee, led by a business person and an educator, will advocate and promote the programto students and monitor implementation.
Related Strategies: College transition programsare the adult analogs to early college experiences forhigh school students. These vital transition programs,with their strong counseling and mentoring components, should be available at all adult educationprogram sites. In some cases, this may include effectiveuse of distance learning technology.
In addition, adult students, especially those with families and or full-time jobs, often encounter unexpected conflicts with their college plans. Thesestudents require college services that are very differentfrom those demanded by more traditional students.These services may include: supplemental financialassistance to cover unmet need and emergencies,child care assistance and transportation assistance, as well as dedicated academic advising by faculty and peers and special orientation sessions.
20
The Maine College Transition Initiative will:• Help adults who are earning a high school
diploma transition to college.• Provide support to adults who have a high
school degree but are not academically prepared to take college courses.
• Provide counseling, mentoring and support services to enable these adults to successfully transition to college and earn a degree.
The Goal: Ensure that 10,000 additional Maine workers earndegrees from Maine colleges and universities over the next decade with assistance from their employers.
The Challenge: Maine’s laggingeducational attainment is a hugecompetitive disadvantage for thestate’s public and private employers.Fortunately, there are a lot of thingsemployers can do in collaborationwith government and educators to help their more than 700,000employees earn college degrees and to expand the supply of skilled,college-educated workers in Maine.
One of the most effective forms ofsupport an employer can offer is so-called “tuition reimbursement”—reimbursing employees for what theypay to take college courses, usuallyon a part-time basis while they work.Employer-provided tuition “reim-bursement” is especially effectivewhen it is provided before a coursestarts. That’s when employees need it to pay their tuition bills. To ensureaccountability, employers may stipulate that if an employee does not maintain a certain grade level, the reimbursement must be returnedto the employer.
Two-thirds of adults who take collegecourses for credit receive financialsupport from their employer, according to the Center for Businessand Economic Research. Yet only onein four Maine employers surveyed in
1999 reported that they providedtuition reimbursement benefits.
Cost is not the only barrier to continuing education for workers. For example, nearly two-thirds of thelow-wage workers surveyed in 2003by the respected Boston-based nonprofit organization called Jobs forthe Future reported that their workschedules created a barrier to furthereducation.
In response, some employers providetime off or space during the workdayor on weekends for courses to bedelivered in person or through distancelearning. Some provide employeeswith career counseling through theirhuman resources departments. Othersreward employees who earn degreeswith bonuses or promotions.
Everyone benefits when employerscommit to their employees’ furthereducation. Employers get a moreskilled and productive workforce.Maine’s working people increase their skills—and that means theyincrease their lifetime earnings. The State of Maine strengthens its competitive position in theKnowledge Economy. And collegesand universities boost their enroll-ments and enrich their campuses with dedicated adult learners.
The Strategy: The Compact willestablish a College for ME EmployerInitiative to provide Maine’s publicand private employers with technical
ACTION STRATEGIES
Establish the College for ME Employer Initiative to helpemployers support the education of their workforce.4
Everyone benefits when
employers commit to
their employees’ further
education. Employers
get a more skilled and
productive workforce.
Maine’s working people
increase their skills—and
that means they increase
their lifetime earnings.
The State of Maine
strengthens its competitive
position in the Knowledge
Economy. And colleges
and universities boost
their enrollments and
enrich their campuses
with dedicated adult
learners.
21
assistance, training and statewide recognition for forward-looking workforce education policies. The Compact will also advocate a simple state tax credit that reimburses employers for 50% ofwhat they pay to help employees pursue collegedegree programs.
The College for ME Employer Initiative will provide Maine employers with information, training and technical assistance delivered regionally and on site.
This technical assistance could include help conducting audits of existing practices, settingfive-year goals, increasing employee participationin tuition assistance programs and connectingincreased educational attainment to workplaceadvancement. Loaned executives will be usedextensively to assist employers.
Many Maine employers already provide successfulmodels for holistic strategies to encourage workforce education. One particularly progressiveprogram reimburses the costs of tuition, fees and books for employees enrolled in any degree-granting program in any field. The program offerspaid time off for studying, up to three hours per week. And perhaps most importantly, upon graduation, employees receive $10,000 in companystock for a bachelor’s degree and $5,000 for anassociate degree.
The College for ME Employer Initiative will allowthese types of best practices to be benchmarked andsuccessful approaches showcased and replicated.
The long-term intent of the College for MEEmployer Initiative is to support all Maine workersand employers. In the first five years, however, theinitiative will focus on Maine’s larger companiesand organizations, and on trade associations,which, in turn, may develop education programsfor the smaller businesses in their memberships.
The Partners: The College for ME EmployerInitiative will be a partnership among participatingMaine employers, educational institutions andstate government. Maine employers will adoptpolicies and take actions to encourage workers toearn degrees. These actions include payment oftuition, mentoring support and flextime to takecourses. Colleges and universities will facilitatedelivery of courses on site and at times that areconvenient to working people. They will also forgespecial agreements with employers or groups ofemployers to facilitate learning. State governmentwill provide the tax credit.
Related Strategies: Employers may also workclosely with schools and colleges to develop mentoringand internship opportunities for students. Thesearrangements have been shown to keep young people interested in school and to help them developcareer goals, while providing employers with fresh perspectives and new ideas.
22
The Compact will encourage and supportemployers by:• Disseminating information about best practices• Providing training and technical assistance,
such as:- Audits of existing practices- Setting five-year goals- Increasing participation in existing
programs• Advocating a state tax credit for 50% of
tuition assistance costs
The Goal: Change the values,expectations and behaviors of Mainecitizens regarding higher educationand inspire more of them to pursueand complete postsecondarydegrees, leading to a stronger economic future for Maine.
The Challenge: In many ways,Maine’s lagging educational attainment is a product of cultural attitudes. To nurture college aspirations,parents and other caring adults mustplay a central role in helping studentsmake connections between academicsand their application in the workplaceand the community. Yet in some ruralparts of Maine, parents steer childrenaway from college, fearing thatyoung people may never return oncethey’ve seen the bright lights ofOrono, never mind Paris.
Moreover, low college attainmenttends to beget low college aspirations. As the demographerHarold L. Hodgkinson has written:“Many low-income, ethnic minorityand immigrant children do not getexposed to the folklore of ‘how youget into college’ in junior high years,while the ‘favored’ have brothers andsisters in college, parents who arecollege graduates and lots of advice.”
The Strategy: To achieve theambitious goal of preparing 39,500new college degree holders in Mainewithin 15 years, the Compact andpartners will conduct a comprehensive
campaign to raise awareness ofCollege for ME opportunities andultimately to change prevailing attitudes about the value of collegeeducation in Maine.
Building on existing initiatives, themulti-year campaign will seek tochange the values, expectations andbehaviors of Maine citizens regardinghigher education. Targeted messageswill be developed to influence so-called end-users, including families,educators and potential students ofall ages, and to engender supportamong opinion leaders, includinglawmakers, business and communityleaders. The goal is to inspire Mainecitizens to take action to pursue andcomplete college degrees or toencourage others to do so.
College for ME messages will reachacross Maine through television,radio, newspaper and the Internet.College for ME will be visible inschools, communities and businessesthroughout the state. In time,College for ME will result in a changein the prevailing attitudes abouthigher education, creating a sharedvision of college as the Right andResponsibility of all Maine residents.
ACTION STRATEGIES
Launch a comprehensive College for ME Campaign to change publicperceptions of higher education and behaviors toward going to college. 5
In time, College for ME
will result in a change in
the prevailing attitudes
about higher education,
creating a shared vision
of college as the Right
and Responsibility of all
Maine residents.
23
The Partners: The Maine Compact for HigherEducation will organize the College for MECampaign. The Campaign will be a partnership of educators, businesses, media organizations andopinion leaders in Maine.
Related Strategies: To further encourage innovation in improving educational attainment, theCompact will convene educators, business leaders and others for an annual summit focusing on bestpractices in improving higher education attainment.
24
Of course, a few action strategies will not changethe educational culture sufficiently to ensureMaine’s economic future. A more comprehensiveeffort is required to improve college-going andacademic success in Maine.
With this in mind, the Compact will also continueto explore a wide range of additional strategiesaimed at making sure all Maine residents are educated for tomorrow’s economy.
Here are some of the additional considerationsdeveloped by the Compact to move Maine in thisdirection by improving student preparation for college, encouraging completion and smooth transitions at each level and ensuring affordability.
PREPARATION
Expand Learning ResultsMaine should expand its successful Learning Resultsprogram, so all students are academically preparedfor a successful college experience. State educationleaders should also promote and strengthen theCareer Preparation component of the LearningResults program.
Require Completion of a CollegeApplication or Financial-aid Applicationfor High School GraduationAn important barrier to college attainment is lack ofinformation on college accessibility. Some studentsand their families mistakenly believe that college isbeyond their reach academically or financially. Highschools could require students to obtain at leastsome information about college accessibility as aprecondition of graduation.
Use Distance Education to Improve TransitionsMaine should expand opportunities for both adultsand recent high school graduates to earn collegedegrees online. Information technologies shouldalso be used to offer students reduced-rate SAT prepclasses, early college experiences, placement testsand remedial courses. This will require increasing
Maine’s investments in technological infrastructureand distance learning capacity.
RETENTION & COMPLETION
Create a Pre-K-to-16 “System”Maine’s preschool, K-12, adult basic education andhigher education systems should work together tostreamline the transitions from preschool to K-12education, then on through college. This mayinclude examining how curricula, assessments andexit and entrance exams are aligned and working to change the budgetary structures that force theeducation sectors to compete for limited state funds.
Reward Degree CompletionMaine should design a pilot program offering grantsto Maine residents who complete a degree at anyaccredited Maine institution. Students who completea two-year, associate degree could be awarded$1,000, while those finishing a four-year, bachelor’sdegree receive $2,000. In order to encourage timelydegree completion, grants should be available onlyto students completing their degrees within 150% of the customary completion time—that is, threeyears for an associate degree and six years for abachelor’s degree.
Support Working Adult StudentsColleges should adapt academic and student services to working adult students. These studentsmay require instruction at employer worksites;more distance learning opportunities; evening andweekend course offerings; shortened programs;more flexible course formats; dedicated academicadvising by faculty and peers; and special orientation sessions. They may also require supplemental financial assistance to pay for childcare, transportation or emergency needs.
Hold Summit on Higher Education Attainment The Compact should convene educators, businessleaders and others for an annual summit focusing on best practices in improving higher educationattainment. Such gatherings would aim to help all
25
ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
Maine institutions develop systematic approaches toimprove student access, retention and completion.
Invest in Public Higher Education Maine’s below-average investment in public highereducation and state grant programs causes ever-rising college prices to outpace student aid fundsand that discourages lower- and middle-incomefamilies from pursuing college. Maine should investconsistently and adequately in its public colleges anduniversities. Additional funds are also needed to support institutions in developing student retentionstrategies and providing needed services for workingadults and to support statewide data collection andanalysis. At the same time, educators and policymakers should examine models of governance andeducation delivery that could enhance efficiency.
Ensure Uniform Data Collection onAttainment and PerformanceMaine should establish a state-level office to coordinate, collect and analyze data on students in Maine and to track progress in expanding educational attainment. This office should alsowork with Maine’s public campuses to developappropriate performance standards and benchmarks in the areas of student retention and completion.
Reward Institutions for PerformanceMaine institutions and systems that make significantprogress in expanding educational attainment andstudent dropout rates should be able to earn up toan additional 1% in annual funding.
AFFORDABILITY
Make College Savings Universal for Maine FamiliesCollege savings plans receive special tax advantagesunder section 529 of the federal tax code. Maineshould establish a 529 account for every Maine childborn after Jan. 1, 2005 and, with underwriting fromthe private sector, begin each child with a symbolicdeposit of $100 to be used toward tuition at anaccredited college or university. Regular statements
showing the growth of a child’s investment wouldserve as an information source and motivator to parents.
Bolster Existing Financial Aid ProgramsThe state should double the value of need-basedMaine State Grants and reduce the eligibility thresholds for part-time and working students.
Forgive Loans for College Graduates Who Live and Work in MaineLoan forgiveness turns a loan that must be paidback into a grant. Maine should introduce a taxcredit that, in effect, “forgives” any loans taken by people who finish college and live and work inMaine after graduation. This loan forgiveness taxcredit would provide a powerful incentive for residents to complete degrees and stay in the stateafter graduating from a Maine college—or returnto Maine after graduating from an out-of-state college. Notably, filing a Maine income tax returnwill firmly establish Maine residency, heading offabuse of the program.
Extend Student Aid to AdultsNew financial aid programs are needed to helpadults who are not covered by employer-providedtuition reimbursement programs. Current stateand federal student aid programs are geared to18- to 24-year-old, financially dependent, full-timecollege students. That made perfect sense in the1960s when many of the student aid programswere first developed. It makes little sense today.The new “typical” college student is a workingadult taking courses part-time. And he—moreoften she—is penalized by the old formulas usedto determine eligibility for grants and loans. Jobsfor the Future conducted a survey which capturesthe dilemma facing many adults, particularly low-wage workers (defined as those with annualincomes up to 200% of the federal poverty level).Six in 10 of the workers say getting a GED or college degree would help them advance in theircareers. But six in 10 also see cost as a barrier tofurther education.
26
BudgetsThese are preliminary cost estimates for each strategy.
These estimates will change as each strategy is imple-
mented and more is learned from actual experience.
Please refer to the strategy narrative for information on
the scope of the program.
Maine’s Promise Scholarship ProgramEstimated costs are based on several variables, including
the number of students participating and their level of
need. Based on the information provided on each
student’s FAFSA, the following formula will determine
the amount of Maine Promise Student Scholarship to
be awarded to each student:
Cost of Attendance determined by each institution’s
financial aid office
(Less) Expected Family Contribution (EFC)
(Less) Waivers, Scholarships, Grants, & Work Programs
= Maine’s Promise Scholarship = unmet need “gap”
The cost estimates below are based on a program for
students whose family income is at or below 200% of
poverty. Please refer to the program narrative for more
detail on number of students served. The year 4 costs
are the annual expenses going forward.
Maine Early College InitiativeThe budget impacts of this strategy relate most directly
to the cost of enrollment in collegiate-level courses,
and the support systems that need to be in place at the
colleges to ensure that a student’s first experiences with
college-level learning are successful.
To date, Maine’s piloted early college opportunities
range in costs depending on the institution, the number
and types of courses taken, and the accompanying fees.
These models also have included resources for student
support at the college.
Declining enrollments in Maine’s high schools will also
impact future costs. It is much more likely that a variety
of models will be explored and that high schools and
colleges will work through the policy and tuition issues
to more completely share and reduce expenses. In
order for this to be a truly statewide initiative for all
high school students, we need to figure out how to
incorporate these policy and tuition issues into state
and local budgets.
In the next two years, foundation support will be
sought to expand Maine’s pilot programs, thereby
giving us better information upon which to project
costs. Using current data, we project that, by Year 3,
about $3.425 million will be needed to deliver to the
program statewide to 7,500 students: if 25% of the
30,000 high school juniors and seniors take a three-
credit course at an average negotiated cost of $250,
the dollar estimate is $1.875 million; in addition, about
$1.550 million is needed to ensure that each of the
state’s 31 public and private colleges is able to provide
professional counseling staff to assist students.
Maine College Transition InitiativeThis budget estimate envisions high-quality college
transitions programming at 30 adult education
programs, at least one of which would be located in
each Superintendent Region, with additional programs
in regions with larger populations. Each funded program
would include outreach to other adult education
programs with the goal of impacting all 126 adult
education programs in Maine. Outreach might include
visiting counselors, off-site classes or distance learning,
with special emphasis on the use of ATM.
This program is based on a model piloted in Maine by
the Nellie Mae Education Foundation and includes:
needs assessment, instruction and counseling, academic
remediation and prerequisite courses, career advising,
college skills workshops, field trips to campus, placement
27
APPENDIX A
PHASE-IN OVER TIME; BEGINNING WITH NEW STUDENTS
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Students
3,255
5,339
6,346
7,286
$14,570,809
$24,189,077
$29,422,448
$34,309,811
Costs
28
testing and assistance with application and financial aid
process, staffing with personnel clearly identified with
the project and provided with quality staff development,
formal coordination with postsecondary partners,
mentoring and follow-up after enrollment and
program evaluation.
Year 1 costs would include the addition of a position
at the Maine Department of Education, which would
remain for the ten years. In the second year, ten sites
would be started and supported for five years: $20,000
for the first two years, $15,000 in Year 3, $10,000 in
Year 4, and $5,000 in Year 5. In Years 3 through 6,
five sites would be added each year using the same
schedule of funding as above. The phase out of the
initial five-year funding would be offset by an
increase in registration fees and other educational
funding sources.
Funding for this program averages $290,000 per year
for the ten years, peaking in Years 5 and 6.
College for ME Employer InitiativeThe cost of the 50% tax credit in lower tax revenue
may be up to $3.75 million per year. This figure is
based on 10,000 students earning degrees – 50%
associate degrees and 50% bachelor’s degrees over a
decade, at a per credit cost based on the average cost
of University of Maine System and Maine Community
College System. This figure may be high because it
assumes that every employer will take advantage of
the tax credit (which would not be the case for govern-
ment/non-profit employers, S corporations, etc.), and
that every student will need the full complement of
two- to four-year courses (not the case since many
workers will have completed some college).
An existing statewide organization will administer and
deliver the program, overseen by an advisory board.
An annual operating budget of $150,000 - $200,000
would support two full-time staff and expenses. These
funds would be raised privately.
College for ME CampaignThe scope of the campaign is still under discussion.
Preliminary estimates are $2 million for a five-year
campaign. These funds would be raised privately.
About the Data
THE CASE FOR COLLEGE
1. Maine’s Challenge
Projected educational attainment of today’sninth graders: According to the most recent data
from the Maine Department of Education, there were
19,243 ninth-graders in Maine in October 2002 (17,029
students enrolled in public schools and 2,214 students
enrolled in private schools). For the purposes of our
analysis, it is assumed that these ninth-graders will have
the same educational experiences as recent cohorts of
Maine students. According to the Maine Department of
Education, 14,716 students graduated from Maine’s high
schools in 2002. Three years earlier, there were 18,816
ninth-graders in Maine. Evidently, the regular graduation
rate in the most recent data was 78% (although it is clearly
possible that there was some net migration of students
over this period). Applying this rate to 19,243 ninth-
graders yields 15,050 high school graduates.
The U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey
(CPS) data indicate that a far higher percentage will
attain a high school diploma or GED. To be specific, in
the three samples from 2000 to 2002, 94% of Maine
residents between the ages of 25 to 39 had a high school
diploma or its equivalent. Applying this rate to 19,243
ninth-graders yields 18,060 diploma-holders. Evidently,
about 3,010 (18,060 minus 15,050) will obtain the
diploma later than their classmates.
CPS data for the same group (25- to 39-year-old
Mainers in 2000-2002) indicate that 57% of holders of
high school diplomas have at least some college experi-
ence. Applying this rate to 18,060 diploma holders
yields 10,367 with college experience. Recent data from
the National Center for Education Statistics indicate that
about 53% of regular high school graduates enroll in
college the following fall. Applying this rate to 15,050
traditional high school graduates yields 7,977 traditional
college students.
The 2000-2002 CPS data for 25- to 39-year-old Mainers
indicate that 69% of those with college experience have a
college degree. Applying this rate to 10,367 yields 7,221
college graduates. The percentage of degree holders with
at least a bachelor’s degree is 69%. Applying this rate to
7,221 yields 4,982 recipients of four-year degrees. This
suggests that overall, 62% of recent ninth-graders veered
off the road to college degrees [(19,243-7,221)/ 19,243].
Maine residents leaving the state for college:Sam Kipp, A Fresh Look at College-Going Rates in Maine,
Finance Authority of Maine, 2000.
College attainment: The best source of data on
college attainment for years when there is no decennial
census is the CPS. The CPS samples more than 200,000
working-age (25- to 64-year-old) Americans annually,
including more than 3,000 from Maine. Despite this
large sample size, there is considerable year-to-year
variation in average college attainment for a small state
like Maine. To reduce this sampling-error variation, we
calculated a three-year moving average (an approach
used by the U.S. Department of Education). These
attainment numbers differ from the widely used Census
numbers for two reasons. The Census typically reports
attainment for all adults over age 25, not just for
those of typical working age. The Census also reports
noticeably lower levels of associate degrees.
Working-age adults with some college: In the
last five years of CPS data (1998-2002), about 15.8% of
Mainers between the ages of 25 to 64 reported having
“some college” but no degree. The Census Bureau projects
that there will be about 710,000 Maine people in the
25-64 age bracket in 2004, and about 745,000 in 2014.
These numbers suggest that there are currently more than
112,000 working-age adults in Maine with some college
but no degree, and that there will be almost 118,000
adults in this category in 2014.
2. Benefits of Education
Earnings by educational attainment:Postsecondary Education Opportunity analysis of U.S. Census
data, www.postsecondary.org.
Lifetime earning estimates: Jennifer Cheeseman Day and Eric C. Newberger, The Big
Payoff: Educational Attainment and Synthetic Estimates of
Work-Life Earnings, U.S. Census Bureau, 2002.
29
APPENDIX B
Thomas G. Mortenson quote:
“Leading Indicator: Higher Education Opportunity in New
England,” Connection: The Journal of the New England Board
of Higher Education, Vol. XVII, No. 5, Spring 2003
Tax revenues per bachelor’s degree: In 1999 and 2000 CPS data, the average annual earnings
of Maine residents with bachelor’s degrees (and no higher
degree) was roughly $15,650 greater than the average
earnings of Maine residents with high school diplomas
only (and this is a conservative figure because it does not
take into account the difference in average weeks worked).
State and local taxes amounted to 13.4% of personal
income in Maine in 1999-2000 (calculated using data
from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Economic
Analysis). Thus, the average additional state and local tax
revenues per bachelor’s degree in Maine are about $2,100
annually. This is a conservative estimate of the additional
tax revenues because it ignores the fact that state and local
taxes are somewhat progressive. That is, the calculation
does not take into account that tax payments increase
slightly more than proportionately with income.
3. A Paradigm Shift: College as Right andResponsibility
Maine students’ national rankings: National
Assessment of Educational Progress: The Nation’s Report
Card, www.nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/. See The
Nation’s Report Card: Reading Highlights 2003 and The
Nation’s Report Card: Science 2000, U.S. Department of
Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National
Center for Education Statistics.
4. Building a New Road to Higher Education
College attainment: Current Population Survey, U.S.
Census Bureau (see college attainment explanation in the
Maine’s Challenge section, above).
Goal for increasing the number of degreeholders: Average college attainment has risen more
or less steadily for decades. Therefore, it would be
inappropriate to use the current level of educational
attainment in New England as a 10-year or 15-year target.
A projection of future attainment levels is obtained
through a simple linear extrapolation of past increases in
attainment. The projected annual growth rates of college
degree attainment in Maine and New England are
assumed to be the same as their average annual growth
rates over the past 10 years (0.83% in Maine, and
0.67% in New England). Although there are legitimate
reasons to quibble about this methodology, it should be
kept in mind that it is consistently applied. That is, if the
projected increases are too high, they are probably too
high for both Maine and New England.
Maine high school graduates and projections:These figures combine data on the number of Maine
public, publicly funded, and private high school
graduates from the Maine Department of Education
(www.state.me.us/education/enroll/grads/gradspost.htm)
with negative growth rates developed by the Western
Interstate Commission for Higher Education. See
Knocking at the College Door: Projections of High School
Graduates by State, Income, and Race/Ethnicity,
www.wiche.edu/policy/knocking/1988%2D2018.
High school graduates enrolling in college,Maine and New England: Digest of Education
Statistics 2002, National Center for Education Statistics,
U.S. Department of Education.
Degree completion rate in Maine: All data are
from Digest of Education Statistics, National Center for
Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education,
various years.
These numbers are based on estimates of full-time (FTE)
undergraduate students. FTE numbers are available for
total (undergraduate and graduate) enrollment, but not
for undergraduate enrollment. To convert undergraduate
enrollment into FTE undergraduate enrollment, the FTE
percentage (FTE enrollment divided by enrollment) for
total enrollment was applied to undergraduate enrollment.
In other words, it is assumed that the FTE percentage
(about 75% in Maine, New England, and the U.S.) is the
same for undergraduate and graduate students. Note that
this measure includes some double counting of degrees
when students earn both associate and bachelor’s degrees.
30
ACTION STRATEGIES
1. Maine’s Promise Scholarship Program
Maine and national average tuition: Philip
Trostel’s analysis of U.S. Department of Education data.
See “Economic Prosperity in Maine: Held Back by the Lack
of Higher Education,” Maine Policy Review, Winter 2002.
Poverty in Maine: 2000 Census data show that 10.9%
of Maine’s population lived below the poverty level. CPS
data for 2003 suggest that Maine’s poverty rate has risen
to 11.9%. Maine Department of Education data show that
25% of Maine public school students participate in the
free lunch program, for which students from families with
incomes below the poverty level are eligible.
Projected number of eligible students:
There are several ways in which the number of students
participating in the Maine’s Promise Scholarship
Program could substantially exceed the projections
presented here. For example:
• Approximately 2,500 additional currently enrolled
students (beyond the anticipated new students
above) who are not currently eligible for the
scholarship program could become eligible by
altering their behaviors.
• Approximately 2,500 additional traditional-age
graduating high school seniors this year (beyond the
anticipated new students above) from families with
an annual income below 200% of the poverty level
do not intend to enroll in a postsecondary institution
but could be encouraged to enroll.
• Countless nontraditional students may be eligible and
may be encouraged to enroll.
Per-capita expenditures on postsecondaryeducation: Grapevine, a National Database of State
Tax Support for Higher Education, Center for the Study
of Education Policy, Illinois State University,
www.coe.ilstu.edu/grapevine.
2. Maine Early College Initiative
Estimate of current early college experiences:In 2002-2003, there were 29,212 students in grades 11
and 12 in Maine’s public schools (Maine Department
of Education, www.state.me.us/education/enroll/fall/
2003/fenpbg03.htm). 4,565 students, 16% of 11th and
12th graders, took AP exams in 2003 (The College
Board, www.collegeboard.com/student/testing/ap/
exgrd_sum/2003.html). 470 students, 2% of 11th and
12th graders, took a class at a college campus through
the state’s Higher Education Access program (Harry
Osgood, Higher Education Specialist, Maine
Department of Education). These figures combined give
us an estimate of at least 18% of Maine high school
students currently participating in an early college
experience. Although some of the students who take
classes through Higher Education Access may also take
AP exams, this estimate does not include students who
take a college class through agreements with individual
campuses or those who take AP classes but do not take
AP exams, so it is probably a conservative estimate.
3. Maine College Transition Initiative
Number of participants in Adult Educationprograms statewide: Maine Adult EducationAnnual Report 2003, Maine Department ofEducation, www.state.me.us/education/aded/reports/Maine%20Adult%20Ed%20Annual.pdf.
4. College for ME Employer Initiative
Employer support for adults enrolled in college courses: Center for Business and Economic
Research, University of Southern Maine, 2000.
Jobs for the Future study: Getting Ahead:
A Survey of Low-Wage Workers on Opportunities for
Advancement, 2003 (www.jff.org/jff/kc/library/0198).
5. College for ME Campaign
Harold L. Hodgkinson quote: All One System:
A Second Look, Institute for Educational Leadership
and National Center for Public Policy and Higher
Education, 1999.
31
APPENDIX B
Maine Compact for Higher Education is a joint effort of Maine Development Foundation and Maine Community Foundation.
MAINE COMPACT FOR HIGHER EDUCATION45 Memorial Circle, Suite 302 Augusta, Maine 04330
Tel: 207.622.6345 collegeforME.com
The following foundations and organizations have expressed support of the Compact’s mission through their financial support:
Libra Foundation • Maine Community Foundation • Maine Educational Loan Authority (MELA) • MELMAC Education Foundation
Great Maine Schools Project at The Mitchell Institute • Peoples Heritage Bank a Division of Banknorth, N.A. • UnumProvident
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